The Scotsman

Deep friendship that is changing thousands of lives here and in Africa

Kenneth R Ross lauds the ordinary Scots who support links with Malawi

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The recent visit to Scotland by Malawi president Arthur Peter Mutharika was the fifth by a sitting Malawian head of state. Since the country became independen­t in 1964, every president has visited Scotland. Each has recognised that there is an axis connecting the two nations that represents something special.

President Mutharika made the point that most African cities have dropped the names given during the colonial period in favour of reverting to an indigenous place name.

Malawians, however, insist on calling their main commercial city Blantyre because it was named after the birthplace of David Livingston­e. The connection with Scotland that began with the great explorer is central to Malawian identity and the president hailed the people-to-people partnershi­p that is its hallmark today.

His confidence in the vitality and dynamism of the links between the two countries was borne out by a public awareness study recently commission­ed by the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p. This confirmed the results of an earlier study carried out in 2014, that just under half of the population of Scotland personally know someone involved with work in Malawi. Support for such involvemen­t is massive, with more than 75 per cent in favour and less than 2 per cent against.

Today there are more than 1,100 civic links between the two countries. Some are driven by large organ- isations like universiti­es or health boards while others are small charities or community groups. Some benefit from Government funding but most are funded by the communitie­s themselves.

Another recent report, by the University of Edinburgh, estimated that Scots contribute more than £49 million of input to their Malawi links in the last year, with more than 208,000 Malawians and 109,000 Scots actively involved. An estimated 2.9 million Malawians benefited directly last year. No wonder President Mutharika felt that Scotland and Malawi offer something special.

A centrepiec­e of the visit was the signing of a renewed partnershi­p agreement between the Scottish and Malawian government­s, build- ing on the historic 2005 co-operation agreement. This time it was framed as a Global Goals Partnershi­p Agreement, referencin­g the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals adopted by the United Nations in 2015.

The landmark UN framework recognises that without global collaborat­ion, our hopes for developmen­t are sure to be dashed. Scotland and Malawi can justifiabl­y claim to be ahead of the game, having forged their partnershi­p across 150 years.

Claiming to offer a “unique model of internatio­nal developmen­t” the new partnershi­p agreement argues that “in a world where developmen­t is often criticised as too impersonal, as disconnect­ed from real needs on the ground, or as enjoying dwindling public support, the Malawi-scotland

model can point the way towards demand-driven developmen­t that is rooted in long-term partnershi­ps and built on a history of cooperatio­n and friendship”.

The language of friendship is the natural one when considerin­g what unites Scotland and Malawi. It is friendship with a purpose – drawing on the trust, solidarity and mutual respect that has been built across generation­s to tackle the great social challenges of our time, not least extreme poverty.

The Scottish Government’s commitment to working with Malawi enjoys strong cross-party support, driven from the grassroots by thousands of ordinary citizens who are passionate about the Malawi connection. A virtuous circle is created as government action is prompted by public support while initiative­s taken by inspiratio­nal individual­s and organisati­ons can attract government funding.

The strength of the civic links between Scotland and Malawi are drawing increasing attention, with many asking whether this approach could be emulated and scaled up.

Rory Stewart MP, then Africa Minister in the UK Government, speaking in parliament last year, described the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p as “genuinely one of the most unique, remarkable, interestin­g and human interweavi­ngs of two nations anywhere in the world”.

He said: “What is so striking about the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p is that it has found ways of engaging a whole human population. Britain could do that in Malawi or in Tanzania, Uganda or Nigeria. It is a very exciting way of thinking about how to do developmen­t in the 21st century.”

The Scotland Malawi model is proving to be an inspiring example. Our people-to-people friendship is helping transform lives in both our nations.

Kenneth R Ross OBE is chair of the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p.

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